The dynamics of parental care in Choughs(Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax)

Summary

The dynamics of parental investment throughout the nestling stage and the factors affecting it were studied in the Chough(Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax), a species whose patterns of apportioning parental care are largely unknown. The occurrence of important trade-offs between the sexes, among the different activities of parental care and between parents' survival and current offspring survival were estimated. The parental contributions of both sexes were assessed mainly in terms of food provisioning rate and nest attendance time. Only the female brooded young nestlings while the two sexes contributed equally in food deliveries and nest sanitation. Nestling age greatly affected nest attendance time. The female spent a long time brooding in the first 10 days after hatching. Both sexes increased attendance towards the end of the nestling stage. Conversely, feeding rate and feeding rate per nestling remained approximately constant throughout the nestling period. Nestlings in smaller broods received more feeding visits than those in larger broods. The shape of the per-nestling feeding rate curve was ‚concave-up’, supporting Nur's (1984) ‚trade-offs model’ rather than the Lack-Gibb hypothesis. Maintaining a high feeding frequency in broods already above the modal value might be disadvantageous, implying few benefits and large energy costs (i.e. the reduction of the parents' residual reproductive value). Female brooding time in relation to brood size showed the same decreasing ‚concave-up’ trend line. Short-term trade-offs proved to be important determinants of the dynamics of parental care. Specifically, the distance from the feeding areas greatly affected the delivery rate: pairs spent a disproportionately longer time foraging in more distant patches than in closer ones. Diurnal variations and changes owing to weather conditions were also examined.